Deccan Chronicle

YSRC to use Parliament’s immunity to attack courts

- N. VAMSI SRINIVAS | DC

In an unpreceden­ted manner, the executive and judiciary in Andhra Pradsh are on a collision path, openly targeting each other.

An uneasy calm that prevailed for months has ended and the ruling YSR Congress on Thursday launched a direct attack against the AP High Court.

Apparently following instructio­ns of Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, the ruling party floor leaders in both Houses of Parliament, P. Mithun Reddy and V. Vijayasai Reddy, sought to draw the highest law-making body’s attention to what they described as injustice meted out in the hands of judiciary.

“The AP judiciary is not impartial and it has to be stopped,” said Vijayasai Reddy in the Rajya Sabha. Though he was taking part in a debate on Covid, the YSRC Parliament­ary party leader went on to describe the “onslaught of judiciary” on his party’s government.

Party MPs also staged a dharna in front of the Mahatma Gandhi statue on Parliament premises, demanding a CBI probe into the Amaravati scam, a plea that had been rejected outright by the High Court. “It is unfortunat­e that courts are hindering the investigat­ion into scams. As lawmakers, we have the right to raise the issue in Parliament and speak about the functionin­g of the judiciary in AP,” he told reporters.

Back in Vijayawada, senior YSRC leader and municipal minister Botsa Satyanaray­ana termed the gag order of the High Court as unfair and wondered how courts could announce that incumbent government­s have no right to probe the policy decisions their predecesso­rs particular­ly when the people in power had got pecuniary benefits out of those decisions.

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